The government has eased restrictions on building roads and military facilities along its disputed border with China, as it seeks to close the gap on its neighbour's superior transport network and take a stronger stance on Beijing.

Environment minister Prakash Javadekar told Reuters he had relaxed environmental rules within 100 km (62 miles) of the contested border in remote Arunachal Pradesh in order to speed up construction of some 6,000 km of roads.

The move, which also allows for the construction of army stations, arms depots, schools and hospitals in the sparsely populated Himalayan region, was announced days before Chinese President Xi Jinping visits India on September 17-18.

"This is about defence preparedness," said Javadekar. "On the Chinese side of the border, not only have they built good roads, they are building up their railway network. Our army faces problems because of the bad quality of roads," he added.

Work on the roads will start in the coming months.

The country's shift is consistent with expectations that Prime Minister Narendra Modi, who swept to power in elections four months ago, would take a tougher line on territorial disputes with neighbouring countries.

Asian great-power diplomacy stirred to life when the Prime Minister made clear his intention to play an active role on the world stage by inviting regional leaders to his inauguration in May.
His first bilateral visit outside the region was to Japan, and Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe made a two-stop tour of South Asia earlier this month, pre-empting Xi's trip to the region this week.

"COMPLETE SHIFT IN THINKING"
After taking office, Modi moved quickly to appoint a former army chief as a minister for the northeast border region to accelerate development.

China has vastly improved roads and is building or extending airports on its side of the border in Tibet.

According to a 2010 Pentagon report, it had placed nuclear-capable intermediate missiles in the area and deployed around 300,000 troops across the Tibetan plateau.

The government's roads programme could aid plans to establish a mountain strike corps of 80,000 troops who can move easily along its border.

China and India, the world's two most populous nations, fought a brief frontier war in the area in 1962, and Chinese maps still show all of Arunachal Pradesh within China's borders.

Indian efforts at development in the region have been relatively restrained in recent years. In 2013, former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh announced plans for 850 km (530 miles) of new roads in the border region, and proposals to upgrade airfields made little headway.

The previous governments deliberately neglected infrastructure in Arunachal Pradesh, partly to create a natural buffer against any Chinese invasion. That policy was dropped when the extent of development on China's side became clear.

"This is a complete shift in strategic thinking," said Namrata Goswami, a research fellow at the Delhi-based Institute for Defence Studies and Analyses.

DEPENDENCE AND DISTRUST
The neighbours have a complicated relationship marked by growing economic ties but also distrust, particularly over their unresolved territorial disputes.

The two armies were locked in a three-week standoff in May 2013 in the western Himalayas after Chinese troops set up a camp at least 10 km (6 miles) inside territory claimed by India, triggering calls that India should stand up to its neighbour.

Speaking in Beijing recently, Indian National Security Advisor Ajit Doval, a hawkish former spy chief who has in the past expressed doubts about China's motives, said the two nations' disputed border would be discussed during the Chinese President's visit.

"Both sides have agreed to take steps to ensure the peace and tranquility of the border, and seek a fair, reasonable resolution both sides can accept on the basis of peaceful, friendly talks and consultations," Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a news briefing on Thursday.

Under the easing of environmental rules, Javadekar said road building within 100 km of the "Line of Actual Control" - the de facto but disputed border between India and China - would be brought under a single general approval scheme, while the amount of reforestation required would be lowered.